Philosophy for Children (P4C) stems from the work of Mathew Lipman. It involves teacher modeling of exploratory talk in relation to a complex stimulus, then has students discuss together in pairs, larger groups, and the whole class to achieve consensus. The effects of P4C on quantity and quality of interactive dialog on 180 10-year-old children in primary (elementary) mainstream classes in Scotland were investigated. Video recordings of teacher-led and pupil-pupil classroom dialog before, and seven months into, participation in the program were analyzed. Changes in intervention classes included: increased use of open-ended questions by the teacher, increased participation of pupils in classroom dialog, and improved pupil reasoning in justif...
Philosophy for Children (P4C) is a movement that teaches reasoning and argumentative skills to child...
Philosophy for Children (P4C) is implemented in different countries, but there are not many studies ...
In the majority of classrooms, the interaction among teachers and children can still be characterize...
Philosophy for Children (P4C) stems from the work of Mathew Lipman. It involves teacher modeling of ...
To be effective, thinking skills interventions are likely to require specific fine-grain changes in ...
This chapter discusses the process and findings in a Scottish initiative that encouraged collaborati...
The authors examined the testimonials of 60 elementary school students about their experience during...
Scotland’s Curriculum for Excellence affords greater autonomy and flexibility to teachers and school...
The Philosophy for Children in Schools Project is an ongoing research project to explore the impact ...
Philosophy for Children (P4C) was conceived by Professor Matthew Lipman in the late 1960s. It encour...
Theories of learning have long emphasized the essential role of social factors in the development of...
The construct that came into our lives with the term 'philosophy for children' (P4C) in 1970s is a m...
This study investigated whether students who engage in inquiry dialogue with others improve their pe...
This paper offers a critical exploration of the Philosophy for Children (P4C) movement, which aims a...
Available evidence suggests that philosophy for children (P4C) is a highly effective pedagogy in dev...
Philosophy for Children (P4C) is a movement that teaches reasoning and argumentative skills to child...
Philosophy for Children (P4C) is implemented in different countries, but there are not many studies ...
In the majority of classrooms, the interaction among teachers and children can still be characterize...
Philosophy for Children (P4C) stems from the work of Mathew Lipman. It involves teacher modeling of ...
To be effective, thinking skills interventions are likely to require specific fine-grain changes in ...
This chapter discusses the process and findings in a Scottish initiative that encouraged collaborati...
The authors examined the testimonials of 60 elementary school students about their experience during...
Scotland’s Curriculum for Excellence affords greater autonomy and flexibility to teachers and school...
The Philosophy for Children in Schools Project is an ongoing research project to explore the impact ...
Philosophy for Children (P4C) was conceived by Professor Matthew Lipman in the late 1960s. It encour...
Theories of learning have long emphasized the essential role of social factors in the development of...
The construct that came into our lives with the term 'philosophy for children' (P4C) in 1970s is a m...
This study investigated whether students who engage in inquiry dialogue with others improve their pe...
This paper offers a critical exploration of the Philosophy for Children (P4C) movement, which aims a...
Available evidence suggests that philosophy for children (P4C) is a highly effective pedagogy in dev...
Philosophy for Children (P4C) is a movement that teaches reasoning and argumentative skills to child...
Philosophy for Children (P4C) is implemented in different countries, but there are not many studies ...
In the majority of classrooms, the interaction among teachers and children can still be characterize...